How do Israelis feel about it?Before the plan was announced publicly, both Prime Minister Netanyahu and Blue and White Chairman Benny Gantz had approved the plan as a basis for direct negotiations. Netanyahu announced that he would begin work to annex areas approved through the plan as soon as next week. Gantz’s party announced that the proposal “is entirely consistent with the principles of state and security espoused by Blue and White.” Nonetheless, a party official said that the party would not support the implementation of any aspect of the plan before the March 2 election.
Israeli Defense Minister and chairman of the right-wing Yamina party Naftali Bennett called on the government to immediately move forward with annexation of areas of the West Bank approved in the deal. However, Bennett also warned that “to be clear, we will not allow the Israeli government to recognize a Palestinian state under any circumstances. We will not allow Israel to deliver an inch of land to the Arabs. That’s what we’re here for, guarding the Land of Israel.”
On the other side of the political spectrum, Amir Peretz, the leader of the left-wing Labor-Gesher-Meretz party declared that Israel’s future should only be determined through direct negotiations with the Palestinian Authority rather than through unilateral moves. Peretz noted that the timing of the plan, only a month before national elections, makes it clear that “there is no legitimacy for the government to carry out diplomatic moves, despite American backing, and must be dealt with after the election.”
How do Palestinians feel about it?
In an emotional televised address, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas rejected the plan with “a thousand no’s”, calling the plan a conspiracy and declaring that Jerusalem and the rights of the Palestinian people are “not for sale”. Abbas added that the Palestinians remain committed to ending the Israeli occupation and establishing a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital.
How does the Muslim world feel about it?
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar and the UAE all issued statements in support of Trump’s plan. The Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that “the kingdom reiterates its support for all efforts aimed at reaching a just and comprehensive resolution to the Palestinian cause”.The UAE, Bahrain and Oman all sent their ambassadors to the announcement of the deal despite the fact that these countries do not officially recognize the Jewish state. On the other side of the fence, the Iranian foreign ministry referred to the plan as “treason of the century” and doomed to fail.
How did the American Jewish community respond to the plan?
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) responded to the Trump plan over Twitter saying it “appreciates the efforts of President Trump and his administration to work in consultation with the leaders of the two major Israeli political parties to set forth ideas to resolve the conflict in a way that recognizes our ally’s critical security needs.” AIPAC encouraged the “Palestinians to rejoin Israelis at the negotiating table.”
J Street fervently opposed the plan, describing it as “the logical culmination of repeated bad-faith steps this administration has taken to validate the agenda of the Israeli right, prevent the achievement of a viable, negotiated, two-state solution and ensure that Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian territory in the West Bank becomes permanent.”
The Israel Policy Forum, an American Jewish organization that works toward a negotiated two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, responded to the plan by saying that “no agreement can be imposed upon the two sides and that the only way to achieve a sustainable resolution is through direct negotiations between the parties. We hope that Israelis and Palestinians, with the help of the U.S., can take steps toward creating a more favorable political environment to enable those negotiations to take place one day.” |